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Sunday, March 29, 2015

When my oldest sister offered me her pinky ring, which I
adored, I knew something was up. It was her way of telling me she got engaged.

I was in sixth grade when Priscilla wiggled her finger at me
and then switched her arms around to show me her engagement ring from Rick, a
man she had known since her childhood days at Byron Bible Camp in South Dakota.

In the late 70s, when they’d started dating, I asked her why
she liked him. Her response was always the same. "Because he's a
hunk."

My elementary mind needed a definition, and she readily supplied one.
Later, I learned there was more substance to her feelings than that, but for a
little kid, the answer sufficed.

Their engagement was happy-sad for me. I loved
having my Sissy around, and when she started dating Rick, who lived about two
hours away, my fun doubled when he would visit. But I knew after they’d get
married, she’d be far away.

Pris & Rick: the early years

Rick was an only child, and I was a late comer growing up as
though I was one, so we got along pretty well. When he’d visit, it would be for
the entire weekend since he was a farmer. He and Sissy enjoyed putting puzzles
together. I got in on that too. Come to think of it, I'm sure I crashed in on their date time a lot when they were in the house.

Puzzle work meant sorting the pieces into pans. Edges in
one, colors in another, make the border first. The puzzle would remain set up
in the living room if it wasn’t completed during that visit.

Puzzle Time. Pris snapped this picture of me on Rick's lap.

I don't remember the first time I met Rick, but I do
remember the first time my 10-year-old eyes saw him kiss my sister. I was sneaking
around the dining room doorway, and there they were between the kitchen and the
living room smooching.

Doorways seemed to be a place Rick liked, for I remember Mom
complaining that he'd leave his shoes in the middle of them. Pris said he still
does that.

Pris & Rick in 2012 on their 34th wedding anniversary

After 37 years of marriage this past March 25 of 2015, I’d have to say he's
taken pretty good care of my Sissy and continues to put up with me, his pesky
little sister-in-law. They raised three children, two boys and a girl. The
smooches I see now are with their eight grandchildren. Grandparenthood suits
them.

Anybody else remember times when an older sibling started dating? Care to share your antics?

Writer’s Note: For more firsts involving my big sister’s
life with Rick, click here and read Curlers, a Bra, and an Airplane Ride.

Saturday, March 21, 2015

My first house dog would have reached the age of 20 this past St. Patrick's Day. For a dachshund, that would be astounding.The elongated creatures are a loyal and lovable breed, for who doesn't love the occasional, "Hey, it's a wiener dog!" But these fur kids are prone to back problems and overeating. And eating is something my dog loved to do.

Lexy with my siblings. Top left with Priscilla, Brenda on the right, and with Elliott, lower left.

All of Lexy's bad habits were my fault. Diving for food, digging
in purses, ripping papers, chewing woodwork. Not a pretty thing for a canine who came from a line of pure bred show dogs.But I will take credit
for her friendly, unabashed nature too. She never feared anyone or anything. She
had no reason to. I raised her from the time she was a puppy after getting her from Jacquie Girrens in June of 1995.To honor her memory this year, here's a lighthearted look at some of the things Lexy ate during the 11-plus years of her life.Corn on the CobLexy grabbed one out of my brother-in-law Rick's hand when he was teasing her with it at my sister Brenda's house. Lexy gagged on it, and I had to reach down her throat and pull it out. I gave Rick a piece of my mind as he did me about keeping her around the table. But Rick's a dog lover, so I don't hold it against him.

Lexy rests as Rick and I play chess.

ButterShe'd jump up on chairs if we didn't push them in. If Priscilla, my other sister who was Rick's wife, had butter on the table, Lexy would eat the entire stick if we didn't stop her in time. Result: loose bowels.PizzaAgain, we didn't push in the chairs, so at my step-daughter Brittany's 13th birthday party, Lexy joined in and gobbled some pizza. See, I told you. These were all my fault.ChocolateDon't worry. We got her to vomit and she was okay. When I found an almost empty bag of chocolate in the hallway at my sister Priscilla's, I knew what had happened. Lexy had been snooping around in a bedroom where Pris was storing wedding supplies for her son's reception. We called a vet, and they told us what to do so she would foam and then expel it. So we waited. And waited. And waited. And just about the time we were going to load her up and take her in, up it all came. PTL!

Mom keeping Lexy out of the junk pail.

PantyhoseYes, I used to wear them under my pants. Had to keep warm somehow on cold bus rides during basketball season. Lexy managed to find the nylons and eat the legs. All I found was the waist and butt part. My vet, Doc Mike Herndon, told me how much and how often to give her the goopy black toothpaste-looking stuff that acted as a stool softener. I kept it on hand because of all the stuff she'd get into. Then Doc said, "You need to dig through her poop and puke to piece the pantyhose back together again, so we know all the pieces are out of her." I did that with a big stick. This happened twice. You'd think I'd put them away so she couldn't get to them. Again, all my fault. This is why I do not baby sit.

Lexy & Pepper eye-ball Chris' cereal.

Chewing GumMy friend and colleague Joyce Foley came for a Longaberger party at my house. I usually took Lexy to my neighbors, Jack and Betty Tracy, when I'd have such events, but Joyce had come later, and I already had the wiener girl back at the house. We went into the kitchen, and when we came back out, Lexy was busy chewing up a wad of Big Red gum from Joyce's purse. She did a similar thing when I stopped for a minute to deliver something to my niece Evelynn. When I came back, Lexy had managed to get into my candy and gum and some Advil. The bugger knew how to unzip bags!PoopYes, her own. It's not as uncommon as you might think. I had to give her special pills so she would quit doing it. It was embarrassing when she'd do it in the front side yard. The behavior is called coprophagy. She liked horse droppings, silage, and trash cans too.My life with Lexy was full of crazy events like this, and I loved every minute of it. For a more serious read on my time with her, read the post called The Loss of a Pet.What are your house pet's habits? Have they eaten anything weird?

Sunday, March 15, 2015

The yard. My husband beautifies it each year. Before him, it
was an empty lot filled with weedy grass and dandelions.

He has a green thumb. When a guy at work was going to throw away
an apple seed, Chris took it, nurtured it, and stuck it in the ground. It’s grown into a sturdy tree. Last year it produced a small apple.

My ungreen thumb doesn't know a purple cone flower from a
weed when they peek through the dirt, but I do recognize a morning glory. We’re
trying to keep them from taking over the garden.

morning glory fence: Fall 2010

I like the climbing vine on our chain link fence and arbor,
but not when it wraps around sunflowers, string beans, and other vegetables in
the garden. I picked over 200 of the buggers within ten minutes one time last
summer. Yes, I counted as I plucked ’em.

Morning glories are hardy. We wrapped some in damp paper
towels and sent them home with my friend Elizabeth Tatge last summer. Later she had a
nice little pot of blooming flowers for her patio.

morning glories toppled a climbing pole last Fall in 2014

It’s not just plants and flowers that Chris has filled the yard with, it’s the entire atmosphere he’s created in our outdoor room—that’s
what HGTV would call it.

One weekend in the spring after we'd been married a year, I
traveled to South Dakota for a surprise anniversary party. Chris and his
daughter Brittany stayed home, for she had track practice and music contests.

When I returned three days later, he had built a pavilion over
the cement where a clothesline used to be. I had no idea he was doing it and was so surprised. Then that Fall, Chris dug a hole, got some lumber, and
designed an above ground pond. When the fountain runs, it adds peace to already
quiet surroundings.

Top picture from April 2008. Bottom picture taken July 2009.

After just one season of a garden with flowers (I'd had a veggie garden before), and a yard
with trees, bushes, and vines, I experienced Spring in a whole new way. I could
actually sit outside and enjoy the scenery. Read a book. Talk on the phone. Pet
the dogs. Take a nap. Just be.

If you want to know what I used to think of Spring, click here and read last week's post. But now, with the beauty and joy of Spring brought to my back
door, how could I not like this season?

Have you ever experienced a new perspective on something you
thought you didn’t like? Who or what changed your mind about it?

I’ll blame it on elementary PE when we had
to run 20 laps around the gym to start class. I’m serious, 25. Every.
Single Day. Of PE. Even when we switched teachers. It must have been a district policy. Not my idea of fun. And I liked PE—but not that!

So, my first immature reason as to why I did not like
spring: track kids’ tans.

Incidentally, I used to hate spring break too as an adult. Why on earth would a person hate that? Same reason. I didn't go anywhere to get a tan!

Reason Two

Spring in South Dakota is ugly. Piles of brown snow. Puddles
and mud reside in the yard and on the playground. Streams trickle down the
curbs in town due to the melting snow. As a farm kid, I knew to be thankful for
the moisture, but where I grew up, fields were brown. No pretty winter wheat
like Kansas. Due to the harsh winters or the ground not getting worked in the fall,
Dad planted spring wheat, so it wasn’t until later that green fields emerged.

Reason Three

Basketball season ended. No more high school games and no
more college games after the Final Four, only the NBA. And since I was married
to basketball, like I wrote about here in last week’s post, I suffered withdrawal.

Reason Four

Pressure of music contests. Spring was the competition
season. Guild for piano was especially taxing. If I am remembering correctly,
it didn't need to be memorized, but performers had to announce the key, play
the cords and arpeggios, and then perform the piece. The fancy certificate was
well worth it though and so was the pride of my piano teacher. Click here to
read about her and here to read about my mom and me and my piano playing.

Reason Five

School was almost out. That meant that I wouldn't be around
people my own age for three months—except for church events. The telephone and an occasional sleep over
barely met my social needs back when parents didn’t chauffeur their kids all
over the place. So again, a rather sad and lonely time for this farm kid.

The Used To Part?

Now I do enjoy spring. I’ll write about my transformation in next week’s post.Right now, you probably hate winter, but are there characteristics of the other seasons that put you in a bad mood?

Sunday, March 1, 2015

Between Spring, Summer, Winter, and Fall, I used to say my favorite season was basketball. And basketball was my spouse.

I fell in love with the sport in 1978—back when jump balls occurred at every tie-up. The set-ups often looked funny if a tall player jumped against the feisty guard, but you jolly green giants should not have brought the ball down for us pesky rat terriers to grab it.

The first basketball team I ever played on. I was in 7th grade.
I'm number 33 standing by Coach Ruth Hausemann.
Tinted glass were in style.

I know I am in the minority, but I wish we still had jump balls. That possession arrow determines the winner in close games, and shouldn't the defense have a chance at getting the ball back if the offense didn't take care of it?

Our superintendent, Dale Schneider, a member of the South Dakota Activities Association in the 70s and 80s, would ask us thought provoking questions like that during government class. I could never tell which side of the question he was on.

A change I did like was the smaller ball. It came out during my junior year in high school and helped me shoot and dribble better. I also remember experiments with a shot clock. Didn't like that one bit.

I still do not like watching games with a shot clock. It eliminates the stalling tactic, yes, but it put a new spin on the game delay tactic that I liked. Sure, some coaches, unethical in my opinion, would run a delay game when they were way ahead. But when it was a nail biter, shouldn't the better ball handling team or the well-oiled delay game team win? Isn't that part of the strategy?

I know, some of you are like my mom used to be. She hated how the offensive guards would put on a clinic as the defensive guards darted back and forth hoping for a steal. But oh, when their persistence paid off with a steal and a bucket—what a game! Besides, to be a guard, one needs to be little bit of a show-off, don't you think?

Running a delay game is a big risk. And every basketball fan from South Dakota in the late 70s to early 80s will remember when the Huron College Tribe ran one. The college was only thirty minutes from our farm, so Dad and I went to many of their games.

picture from South Dakota Sports Hall of Fame

Eddie
Boyd, Mel Smith, Spinkle, and Coach Bruce Carrier were household names
in east central South
Dakota. Sprinkle would tick off Carrier so bad he'd get sent to the
showers in the first half, sit at the end of the bench in street
clothes, but then after half-time, Sprinkle would be back in his jersey
playing. Rumor had it some of the little old ladies in town attended
games just to yell at Carrier.

And boy did he get criticized for his delay game tactic in the NAIA
playoffs one year. Our teachers let us listen
to the play-by-play on the radio during school, but I believe this
particular game was in the evening, so we listened at home.

The Tribe literally stalled the entire second half. One player stood in the corner of the court and held the ball. It didn't even pass the hashmark (not a Twitter term). That rule wasn't in place yet. They wanted the last shot of the game to win it, but they flubbed. I can't remember all the details of it except that it was another one of Carrier's controversial coaching maneuvers. It would be interesting to know whatever became of him and his players.

What experience do you have with the old jump ball rule or the four-corner delay tactic? And for my South Dakota readers, what's your favorite Huron Tribe memory?